This is a song that describes the truth of Japanese TV station.
Meaning of lyric
I got a job in a TV station because I wanted make an amusing program.
I couldn't do just as I hoped but I loved my job.
The time was my peak when I Drank all night with TV stars and made good relationship with actresses.
Since the country bought the capital of our company,
we had to make untruth result of questionnaires, to rally decoys for fabricating a boom of the country.
I took a part in the propaganda.
Goodbye our TV station. Goodbye a TV station for Japanese.
Children who don't know everything will long for the country because of a TV station.
Goodbye our TV station, Goodbye a TV station that was filled with our dream.
"It's not TV if that is not delightful" These words are so empty now. So, let's forget it.
Name:
Anonymous2011-08-09 16:48
Sometime I couldn't work pleasantly and I wanted to run away from my job.
However happy smiles of children watching TV supported me.
The actor who criticized unconcealed maneuver of the country was fired from his office.
I felt that was wrong but I could say nothing and we held our breath.
Goodbye our TV station, Goodbye a TV station for Japanese.
Every Japanese Sponsors quitted and there are too many CMs of the country.
Did I hope such a future?
Goodbye our TV station, Goodbye a TV station that was completely changed.
Japanese staff was ousted from there one after another. Now it is a foreign TV station.
In a conference room where only Japanese staff were gathered, a veteran producer wrote “Nippon Banzai” to the whiteboard on the wall and he broke down crying.
Goodbye our TV station, Goodbye a TV station for Japanese.
What can we hand down to the next generation?
I want to tell them to the truth.
Goodbye our TV station, Goodbye a TV station that was filled with our dream.
It’s not TV if that is not delightful. We have to get back to this feeling.
Someday we surely remember it again.
Goodbye our TV station.
Name:
Anonymous2011-08-09 16:49
To all my friends in the world, please save Japan!!
Almost everyone in Japan who has a common sense, is being embrassed by today's controversial mass media.
For instance, they never stop broadcasting about praise of Korean pop music and their cultures.
However, in fact most of those are made up and fabricated by the controversial mass media.
One brave Japanese actor named Sosuke Takaoka, spoke up about this tabooed topic on Twitter, and criticized on this Korean sided controversial broadcasts by one Japanese TV station.
He took this action on behalf of us.
5 days after, he got fired by his agent....
He totally lost his job....
About this incident, over 500,000 comments are already posted on the largest BBS website in Japan called 2ch, and most of these posts are about criticism against the TV station who broadcasts about praise of Korea too much.
But, mass media never talks about this our public willingness.
Then suddenly they started criticizing the actor's personality on TV shows instead.
In spite of democracy, and we must have the freedom of speech, this is definitely gag.
Our public willingness are completely ignored, and never been reflected because of these gigantic mass media's gag. This is so obvious.
All my friends in the world,
please help and save us by sending commonsencial fair comments from foreign countries to Japan since there is no other way that can help this country domestically.
Sincerely
Name:
Anonymous2011-08-09 16:53
Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan did a large sum of financial support of 830,000 US dollars to the political organization of North Korea in Japan.
Moreover, he admits it a fact. This is not? reported in the TV NEWS. The Japanese who knows this is very angry.
Anti-Korean Wave in Japan turns political
Hundreds rally in front of Fuji TV to protest Korean dramas. Is this the turning of the tide?
Girls Generation at the MTV Video Music Aid Japan. The K-Pop group recently held two concerts at the Tokyo Dome in Japan for 45,000 fans.
Despite Bae Yong-joon’s continued demigod status in Japan and K-Pop's domination on the Oricon charts these days, it seems that some Japanese have had enough of weepy Korean soap operas and Korean idols.
Although the exact numbers vary according to media outlets, Chosun Ilbo reported that 500 demonstrators gathered outside Fuji TV headquarters on Sunday August 7, ostensibly to protest the broadcaster’s perpetuation of the Korean Wave.
Popular Japanese actor Sousuke Takaoka (29) of Battle Royale fame first sparked controversy when he Tweeted anti-Hallyu sentiments last month. “I’ll never watch Channel 8 (Fuji TV) again,” he said. “I often think it’s Korean TV. Japanese people want traditional Japanese programs.”
When Takaoka was reportedly dropped from his agency following his Tweets, critics of Korean pop culture and right-wing nationalists organized the rally via the Internet.
Twitter spread word of the anti-Hallyu charge, which took on a political slant as some protesters whipped out Japanese flags and chanted “Long live the emperor” while others belted out the Japanese national anthem.
The protesters declared that they will be rallying again on August 21. Now that Korean and Japanese outlets have all picked up the story, stay tuned for the media circus that is sure to follow.
K-Pop is great for Asia, but don't believe the hallyu hype about global domination. The world's biggest music markets simply don't care
Having followed the Korean media for some time, I’m all too familiar with the unrestrained embellishment of hallyu.
Every time I read an article raving about how successful the Wonder Girls are in the States, or how Rain is a “world star,” I can’t help but cringe.
Don’t get me wrong. I agree that K-Pop is being listened to outside of Korea and that it has an international fan base, but the media’s coverage of hallyu and K-Pop feel-gooderies is ridiculously one-sided.
Crash and burn
Name:
Anonymous2011-08-09 17:11
When BoA debuted in the U.S. several years ago, every major Korean news website claimed that she was spearheading the hallyu movement in the Western hemisphere, saying BoA might just as well stand for Bring On America.
Unfortunately, she didn’t Bring On America; she bombed instead, even though her American album “Eat You Up” was produced by Thomas Troelson and featured tracks by Bloodshy and Avant, a duo that has worked with Madonna, Britney Spears and Jennifer Lopez.
Se7en admitted on the show "Golden Fishery" that his U.S. foray was a failure.
Like BoA, Se7en also tried to find success in North America and worked alongside Mark Shimmel, Rich Harrison and Darkchild. The result? Complete flops.
More than with their disastrous results, I was intrigued with the Korean media coverage that touted these singers as ambassadors of K-Pop to the U.S.
What I'd like to ask is, if a singer, regardless of nationality, debuts in the U.S. with English songs produced specifically for an American audience, is that artist still a part of the Korean Wave?
Take Jay Park (aka Park Jae Beom), a Korean-American and ex-member of the boy band 2PM.
After leaving the group in 2009, he reappeared on YouTube and his rendition of “Nothin’ On You,” originally sung by Bruno Mars, reached well more than a million views.
Korean news websites immediately claimed Park was on his way to becoming an international hallyu star.
These types of articles always puzzle me. Yes, Park is ethnically Korean and debuted in a Korean boy band -- but calling a Korean-American singing in English a hallyu star, and even a promoter of K-Pop, seems to be a wild leap in logic.
Name:
Anonymous2011-08-09 17:12
Misnomer
Before stamping the word "hallyu" on every song with a connection to Korea, it is crucial to first deconstruct the notion of the so-called Korean Wave.
BoA and Se7en have sung songs in English that were produced by Americans, and were transformed and marketed (albeit, unsuccessfully) in a way to suit the American public. Is there, therefore, anything that is so specifically and exclusively “Korean” about their U.S. debuts or their music?
Instead of simply glorifying the concept of hallyu and obsessing over the “exclusivity” and “uniqueness” of K-Pop, the Korean media should understand that when artists are debuting in the U.S. with English songs, people don’t care if it’s J-Pop or K-Pop.
Once these artists cross over to a different cultural arena and play by its rules, the notion of hallyu no longer applies.
Fuji Television Japanese public television and saying, Korean songs and dramas that aired just a day-nearly every day. Why?
From what we have experienced the Great Kanto Earthquake tired, such as drama and song to see flourish in Japan.
However, Fuji TV will present that talent and popularity of Korean food in Korea. Such popularity even though it's not!
The Korean people, the Earthquake East "Sinking of Japan" and laughed and ridiculed.
Its habit, is now the hottest selling it look like a Korean talent in Japan, South Korea not selling at all.
Dingy Korean spirit frustrating.
The vast majority of conscientious citizens in Japan are facing a problem, and that is "biased coverage" by TV stations and other forms of media.
The biased coverage, a kind of extreme form of product placement, claims that Korea, and Korean-related products such as K-POP and Korean Dramas are becoming a massive hit in Japan - however, these claims are false.
By advertising that such things are extremely popular, the media is forcing these unwanted goods onto the Japanese population.
(It is largely believed that TV stations are receiving payment from Korean companies to incorporate the biased coverage into existing TV programmes, as well as airing Korean drama series.)
One japanese actor commented on the biased coverage on the social networking site Twitter, stating that he felt unease about the increasing amount of Korean television being aired across all channels.
Only five days after the comments were made, the actor was fired from his acting firm and now faces unemployment.
Name:
22011-08-11 5:28
The issue has sparked outrage on the largest bulletin board site in Japan, the topic receiving more than 300,000 posts - largely consisting of people voicing their upset and criticising the biased media coverage.
Japanese media is currently facing a steady takeover by South Korea. Viewers are exposed to Korean music, drama, sports and news without a choice. The TV Station 'Fuji TV' in particular are unashamedly obvious in their bias.
Whenever a celebrity voices any kind of unease about the situation, they have been fired from their jobs and have disappeared from the media.
Freedom of speech is coming into question, and those who are seen as damaging the repuatation of Korea are at risk.
Recently, a young actor, Sousuke Takaoka, questioned the amount of air time being taken up by Korean television on the social networking site Twitter,
and was promptly fired from his acting firm and faces unemployment.
TV news programmes either ignored the incident or ran distorted reports,
slandering Takaoka. However, the issue caused hundreds of thousands to voice their support for Takaoka as well as criticising the media.
Name:
32011-08-11 5:30
The proportion of foreign shareholders of Fuji TV is reported to be larger than 30%, maximum 40% . If this is true,
it makes it difficult to say whether it is in the public interest of Japan for foreign countries to have such a strong grip on the media.
It is not that Japan, or the Japanese population has any problem with Korea or Korean culture. However,
the problem is that the media is becoming so increasingly biased towards Korea, that even important Japanese matters are taken priority over.
The motivation is simply money, and people in Japan are beginning to feel as though their own culture is being lost in the process.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Reduce the surface korean native communication with other soft bank, the beginning of the incumbent Prime Minister, and a few Democratic lawmakers large donations from a number of are few Koreans.
Popular US entertainment magazines are reporting that the Korean Wave is already dead. “You can’t really say that it’s already dead so much as it never really existed in the first place”, writes one journalist. “The Korean wave was short-lasting and suffered from poor financial support and childish nationalism.”
Every other country in Asia has had its successes with TV, movies, music, anime etc but Korea has never received any success. “Korean movies have never won awards at international film festivals nor have they ever became popular in the west”.
“Although it’s not clear if Korean singers have really gained as much popularity in South East Asia as they claim, K-pop has made little advancement in America.”
In South East Asia certain Korean TV dramas had temporary success but as those countries started developing their own domestic markets Korean TV has suffered a major decline... “The fact that Korean pop culture really wasn’t that popular is turning out to be a huge disappointment in Korea.”
http://www31.atpages.jp/ujitv/plate/
we made the song to explain JAPANESE situation controled by minority KOREAN . ALl the mass media was seceretly taken by ZAINICHI ( Korean with out JAPANESE nationality) and they promote anit JAPAN TV, pro KOREA programm day bay dy 24/7
MAny of brainwashed by TV JAPANESE do not notice this creepy situation. Please help traditonal JAPAN
Name:
Anonymous2011-09-08 16:51
Oh boy, Japanese sure love to hate Koreans, don't they?
Name:
Anonymous2011-09-11 7:22
>>32 i fucking love korean movies, theyre weird like japan and eastern like china
japan should let korea go ffs, its not like theyre ANNEXING ANYBODY or anything...
in before china hates them too, >china is a communist shit hole that IS actually full of properganda
Name:
としあき2011-09-11 7:59
>34 "traditonal JAPAN" made currency for my country to use before bombing our northern cities before the US intervened
"JAPANESE situation controled by minority KOREAN" seems to be doing a good job making anime and porn for me to fap to and korean BBQ for me to eat.
Its a hard choice, but im gonna have to go with the japan that DOESN`T bomb my country and rape its women in POW camps
tl;dr japan, you're on your own I'm afraid wwwwwww
Name:
Anonymous2011-09-11 9:06
Japanese? MOAR LIEK Fapanese, AMIRITE?
Name:
Anonymous2011-09-11 16:09
Nobel Prize (natural sciences and humanities)
Japan: 15
Korea: 1
Benjami Franklin Medal (sciences)
Japan: 7
Korea: 0
The reason is stealth bomber marketing.
It is reported that the Korean wave is extreme popularity in Japan.
It is the false news.
The next reason is subliminal.
The biggest reason is brainwashing.
The advertising agency puts Korean pressure on the media and the company.
The Democratic Party is supported by the South Korean pressure groups such as a gambling company or the religious group.
They have the special privileges such as exemptions from taxation.
Even if Dentsu of South Korean advertising agency violates the Antitrust Law, Dentsu is forgiven.
The Democratic Party admitted stealth bomber marketing for Dentsu.
The Japanese entertainer lost civil liberties.
They are forced to praise the Korean wave.
The Japanese entertainer lost human rights.
The entertainer who did not praise the Korean wave was discharged and got rid of work.
These are pressure of Dentsu.
Name:
Anonymous2012-02-10 7:57
the purpose of youth is to convert that time into another resource not dependant on time or youth
Name:
Anonymous2012-02-14 8:57
>>36
Correct me if I'm wrong, but you said that china hates korea too? Or did you mean japan, because china vehemently hates japan, but I'm not sure how that really relates to all this, could you elaborate?